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"panther " "girls "

Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 387 How extraordinary and marvelous this was! Too, I was not insensitive to the emoluments and perquisites of this office, to the esteem and prestige that might attend it, to the glory that might be expected to be its consequence, to the wealth and power which, doubtless, sometime, would prove to be its inevitable attachments.
4 388 In office, clearly, I acknowledged to myself, I was a Tatrix.
4 389 I wondered, however, if there was a Tatrix within me, or something else.
4 390 I forced from my mind, angrily, the memory of the girls in brief tunics, chained by the neck, kneeling down, heads down, in the street.
4 391 I forced from my mind, angrily, the memory of the women in the market, naked, chained in place, awaiting the interest of buyers.
4 392 I twisted on the great couch, in misery.
4 393 Nowhere more than on this world had I felt my femininity, and nowhere else, naturally enough, I suppose, had I felt it more keenly frustrated.
How extraordinary and marvelous this was! Too, I was not insensitive to the emoluments and perquisites of this office, to the esteem and prestige that might attend it, to the glory that might be expected to be its consequence, to the wealth and power which, doubtless, sometime, would prove to be its inevitable attachments. In office, clearly, I acknowledged to myself, I was a Tatrix. I wondered, however, if there was a Tatrix within me, or something else. I forced from my mind, angrily, the memory of the girls in brief tunics, chained by the neck, kneeling down, heads down, in the street. I forced from my mind, angrily, the memory of the women in the market, naked, chained in place, awaiting the interest of buyers. I twisted on the great couch, in misery. Nowhere more than on this world had I felt my femininity, and nowhere else, naturally enough, I suppose, had I felt it more keenly frustrated. - (Kajira of Gor, Chapter )